Originally posted by billesarius
KingArthur, have you added Longbowmen to the British unit list? Since the longbow was developed by the Welsh it would seem that the British should have it instead of or in addition to the Anglo-Saxons.http://www.archers.org/longbow.htm
See about one page down under "Origins..."
Yup Welsh Bowmen are in the scenario. Here's there civopedia entry:
#PRTO_Bowman
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^Welsh Bowmen are pioneers and expert proponents of the Long bow in the early Medieval era.
At this time the Welsh are expert guerilla fighters and their bowmen are able to perform hit and run operations on enemy units within their $LINK<zone of control=GCON_ZOC>.
#DESC_PRTO_Bowman
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In June 1402, Henry IV of England sent an army of 8000 men into Wales, a substantial force in those days to put down the Welsh rebellion led by Owain Glyn Dwyr.
Owain now in secure command of much of south and central Wales, quickly gathered his own forces to check the English invasion. On 22 June the two forces collided
on a Welsh hillside named Bryn Glas, in mid-Wales just inside the border near Pilleth.
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^At this battle Glyn Dwrs smaller force unleased its national secret weapon, the Welsh longbow. Properly deployed by trained men, the longbow could be a devastating
weapon. Shooting 37-inch long clothyard arrows tipped with a specially designed bodkin point, the longbow could generate enough force to pierce a knights armor.
With their arrows handily stuck into the ground in front of them (a practice that incidentially guaranteed a nasty bacterial infection to those wounded by them),
the bowmen could wreak fearsome damage on an attacking force before the knights on their heavy warhorses could close in on them.
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^Not understanding what they were up against, the English knights blundered into an uphill charge against the Welsh, and were slaughtered. Things were made even worse
when in the midst of the battle a contingent of Welsh bowmen conscripted to serve with England suddenly switched sides and sent volleys of arrows into the backs of
the advancing English. An appallingly bloody battle by medieval standards, Bryn Glas would be the most lopsided victory won by the Welsh in the course of the war.
(Bones from the mass graves on the battlefield were still being plowed up in the 1800s.)